Cherreads

Judgment vows (first): Chained by the Unseen

FAHTERR
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
330
Views
Synopsis
The ancient traditions and sacred rituals of Yamaoka village determine the fate of its people while Hikari Tsukimura, the 9th kanshisha. carries the inherited power of the Kanshisha who judges souls. Her heart-scanning talent enables her to enforce justice with absolute determination. When Hakari succumbs to forbidden magic her ingrained sense of duty becomes entangled with family loyalty in an unprecedented manner. Hakari who used to take pride in his warrior status and his place as his father’s successor now feels deep bitterness because he never received the power that belonged to him. Desperate to carve his own path, he turns to a long-forgotten relic: The Immortal Mask is a legendary artifact said to bestow divine power to its wearer at an exorbitant price. The creeping corruption of the forbidden magic consumes Hakari's body and mind and transforms him into a dark figure that replaces the boy Hikari once cherished with something monstrous. Hikari learns the terrifying origin story of the mask when he discovers an ancient evil awakening under what was believed to be the deserted ruins of Kurohana Village. She sets off on a mission to prevent her brother's transformation into an irredeemable force as her warning beads glow and past Arbiters whisper guidance to her. Hikari faces both Hakari’s expanding strength and her own internal uncertainty as she tries to stop him. Will she be able to pull him back from the brink or is he already beyond salvation? As war looms, family fractures, and corruption threatens to consume them all. Even its the cost of Hikari immortal. Even its cost everything. Hikari must make an impossible choice. Save her brother—or judge him.
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: Judgement legacy

The morning sun curled around the shrine grounds, shine and warm, clinging to the ancient torii gates to the shrine. The air smelled of earth and incense, heavyweight with the weight of unspoken prayers and fate. Cherry blossoms flying through the air, catching the soft light of sun dawn before settling on the worn stone path ahead.

Hikari Tsukimura, the one who bear judgement from different nine universe. She is the first judgement. She knelt before the shrine, the cloth of her ceremonial coat pooling around her. She just at fourteen, she wear a high responsibility that felt far too heavy for her years, as the Kanshisha, the Arbiter, one who passed judgment on those who stood before the gods, to judge. The beads around her neck pressed into her collarbone, a physical reminder of the burden she carried as the kanshisha.

Infront of her, an poor old man knelt, his hands outstretched and trembling neither from the weight or his age. Yoshida-san. the rice merchant who lived near the eastern gate of Yamaoka. His fear for judgement was obvious, though he trying to keep his head bowed, his back straight. Everyone knew what it meant to be called before the Kanshisha. To be judge.

Hikari let out a slow breath, steadying herself. Then, she reached out.

Her power wasn't thing people could see or watch, but she could feel. Threads of light-thin as silk its mixed with yellow and white light, weightless as breath-unraveled from her thin fingers, weaving through the air before settling over Yoshida's hands but he cant see it. Each thread pulsed, carrying whispers of his soul.

The vision came in fragments.

A winter night, bitter and cruel. Yoshida, hunched against the cold, slipping into the village storehouse. His hands, stiff from the frost, fumbling with the sacks of rice. Fear, not for himself, but for the children huddled in the abandoned temple, their bellies empty, their limbs too thin. He stole-but not for greed. He stole so they could live.

The judgment beads around her neck warmed. They recognized his intent, just as she did.

Hikari opened her eyes.

"Your heart is pure kindness Yoshida-san" she said softly.

Yoshida flinched, as if the words struck him harder than any relief.

"You broke law" she continued, "not for selfish reasons. You risked yourself to save those would have died otherwise. Your punishment is this-you will take in the children you saved. You will be responsible for them, and the village will assist you in providing for them."

For a brief moment, Yoshida was silent. Then, his frail body breath with relief. Tears form in his eyes as he pressed his forehead to the wooden pavement.

"T-Thank you, Thank you, Kanshisha-sama," he whispered softly and shakingly. His voice was unsteady thick with emotion. "I-I couldn't let them starve… i-i couldnt..."

"You did what you thought was right." Hikari said gently. "Now, make it right in the eyes of villager."

Yoshida nodded weakly, wiping his tears as he pushed himself to his shaking feet. The weight of judgment always left people changed—some more than others. As he walked away, Hikari exhaled, the familiar heaviness settling over her like an unseen shroud. Every judgment took something from her, something deeper than exhaustion. And lately… the darkness in people's hearts was becoming harder to ignore.

"You really do make it look easy," a voice murmured from the shadows.

She turned.

Hakari leaned against one of the shrine's pillars, arms crossed, watching her with that inscrutable expression a knife's edge between amusement, disdain, and envy. He had grown taller, stronger, and sharper. Where she remained pale and slight, he carried an intensity that made him seem older than his years. The prayer beads around his neck were wound too tightly, darker than hers, as though trying to strangle something restless inside him.

"The gift shows me the truth," she said simply.

Hakari let out a quiet laugh, devoid of warmth. "Truth," he repeated, rolling the word in his mouth like it tasted bitter. He pushed off the pillar, moving slowly, deliberately. "Funny how the truth always bends in your favor."

She frowned slightly. "W-what are you talking about?"

Hakari stepped closer, his presence pressing in like a shadow stretching long at dusk. "You think you're different from the elders, no you're just like them, sealed and blinded from tradition." he said, voice low, deliberate and bear something. "They praise you because you fit their perfect idea of a Kanshisha to make you work for them more. But real power? It doesn't come from tradition. It doesn't come from beads or a title that has no excuse of it." His gaze darkened. "It's taken, its learned... Not something that past generation to generation... Hmm. Wait. No. Both really past generation to generation i mean it wasnt restrain too strictly."

Hikari's fingers brushed the judgment beads at her throat, she shaking slightly. No way her brother... A pulse of energy rippled beneath her touch a warning.

"I-i never asked for this," she said quietly almost whisler. "The gift chooses its bearer. You are smart Hakari... You know that."

Hakari tilted his head, studying her. Something flickered in his expression turn into something unreadable. Then, he smiled. Sharp. Humorless.

"If you really can see the truth so clearly, tell me, my dear sister Hikari…" His voice was almost gentle, just almost. "Can you see the rot in this village? Black root of rot from generation to generation. The weathered filth that hides behind kind faces called the elders?"

A chill crept up her spine. She didnt know what to answer.

Before she finnaly could answer, footsteps echoed from the shrine's entrance.

Haruka, Hikari older sister stepped inside, her healer's robes swift around softly. Sunlight caught in her white hair. But her expression was tight, her hands twisting in her sleeves.

"The elders... are gathering." she said. "They're requesting your presence... Hikari."

Hakari exhaled, the ghost of a smirk playing at the corner of his lips. Of amusement and envy. "Duty calls, little Arbiter." He turned away, his voice dropping to a whisper. "Don't keep them waiting. They did not wait. Not want to."

Hikari watched him go, unease curling in her gut like a knot pulled too tight.

Haruka's hand found her shoulder, grounding her. "He's been... different lately," she murmured. "I saw him coming back from the forest last night. His robes were… stained with something dark... And... And when I tried to talk to him, he wouldn't look at me."

Hikari's jaw tightened as she looks down. "He's been studying... something," she admitted. "Something he shouldn't be..."

Haruka hesitated, then, barely above a whisper, asked, "Should we tell the... elders?"

Hikari's grip on her beads tightened. As she shake her head. The whispers of past Kanshisha stirred against her skin, but none of them offered guidance on what to do when the darkness you feared… was your own blood.

"Not yet," she said. "He's our brother... Haruka. If there's darkness growing inside him, we need to understand why before... we really pass... judgment."

Neither of them noticed the small scroll that had slipped from Hakari's robes, lying forgotten in the shrine's shadows. Its ink shimmered unnaturally, the symbols along its edges shifting, alive.

On that evening, the Tsukimura family was quiet save the gentle clinking of chopsticks against plates. Their mother, Mizuki, had placed on the table an unpretentious but elegant repast: hot rice, fish grilled over charcoal, and leaves from the home garden. Fingers stiffened by years of channeling energy towards healing those who lay broken or dying relaxed with practiced elegance as she alternated in each turn presenting a bowl. While she donned the white robes of a healer like her daughter Haruka, hers had discrete stitching marking her as the leader of the medical shrine of their village.

Hikari watched her mother's movements, remembering how those same hands had once healed her childhood scrapes with a touch and a smile. Mizuki had taught both her daughters that true strength lay in gentleness, a lesson Hikari tried to remember in her judgments. But tonight, her mother's usual serenity seemed strained, her eyes constantly darting to Hakari's hollow face.

Her brother ate mechanically, his eyes fixed on some distant point before the paper walls of their home. Dark circles underlined his eyes, and his fingers twitched at times, as if clutching something he could see alone. The elegant set of calligraphy given to him by their mother for his previous birthday was still in the corner, gathering dust.

Their father, Takashi, sat at the head of the table, broad shoulders still held straight after years of training up-and-coming guardians for the village. The katana signifying his position as head trainer lay on its stand behind him, its well-oiled surface glinting in the light of the lantern. Scars crisscrossed his wrinkled hands, each one garnered defending their home and traditions. He had always been stern but fair, demanding excellence while understanding the unique path each student must walk.

"You've been missing your training sessions," Takashi said suddenly, breaking the silence. His deep voice, which had guided countless students through their forms, carried a weight that made even the shadows seem to pause. "The young guardians ask about you. Kenji especially—you were always his favorite instructor."

Hakari's chopsticks froze in mid-air to his mouth. "I've been doing some research of my own." The phrase was brusque, on the edge of hostile.

"What research?" Mizuki asked, her healer's perceptions clearly detecting the strain in her son's aura. She reached across the table as though to lay a hand on his, but he pulled it back. "The elders have told me they haven't seen you at the archives. Where are you?

"Because not all knowledge worth having is kept in their precious archives." Hakari's voice had an edge that made Hikari's judgment beads warm against her skin in warning. "Some truths require. deeper searching. Things the elders are too afraid to even whisper about."

Haruka, seated beside Hikari, tensed. "Hakari, if you're experimenting with forbidden techniques—"

"With what?" Hakari interrupted her, at last looking them in the eye. His eyes were fever-bright, and Hikari thought of the plague victims their mother had tended last spring. "With abilities that could actually do some good? That could bring true change to our stagnant customs? Not every one of us can be content with parlor tricks and pretty lights."

"Parlor tricks?" Their father sprang to his feet, his hand gesturing for the sword that was not at his side. "I have seen your sister's gift save lives, prevent wars between villages, steer us through floods and famines. The power of the Kanshisha—"

"Is a crutch!" Hakari hit his hand against the table, making the dishes rattle. "We rely on the visions of a child while other villages build genuine strength. Does our foe take the trouble to have a clean heart when they sharpen their swords?"

Mizuki slowly rose, her robes shuffling as she did so. "Hakari, my son, I will help you. I can feel something is wrong in your soul, something consuming—"

"Get out of my head, mother," Hakari snarled, and for a moment, his face undulated like water in moonlight. "Your healing can't fix what isn't broken."

"Watch your tone," Takashi growled, taking a step closer. The boards creaked beneath him, and Hikari saw his fists clench in the way they did before he pulled out his sword. "Your mother has healed half the village with those skills you disdain. And if you've forgotten the respect due your family, perhaps it's time I reminded you why I was chosen to train the guardians."

The room air chilled. Hakari stood up slowly, and the darkness behind him twisted like a living thing. "Beat respect into me like you did for your students who rebelled against the old ways?" His smile was wickedly cruel. "I am no longer one of your students."

"Hakari!" Her cry shattered like ice on a winter branch, her healing energy flashing hot for a moment—a desperate attempt to defuse things. That beyond corruption.

But Hikari raised her hand, halting them all. The judgment beads at her neck pulsed with a warning light. "Let him speak," she whispered. "These thoughts have corrupted his heart long enough. Better they be out in the open."

Her brother turned to her, and for a moment she saw something flash in his face—a recollection of the boy who used to carry her on his shoulders during festival times, the boy who used to defend her from bullies when her magic had just started. And then it was gone, obliterated by shadows that appeared to consume the glow of the lantern.

"You want to judge me, sister?" He thrust out his hands, imitating the gesture of supplication she had so frequently observed in the shrine. "So do it. Read my heart with your precious gift. Judge me as your perfect judgment sees me."

"Hikari, stop," their mother warned, her healer's senses sharply sensing something wrong. "His soul... is. tainted."

"Let her attempt," Hakari mocked. "Let the chosen one show us all what real power is."

Hikari stood, her ritual garments whispering against the tatami. The judgment beads on her neck began to emit a soft, pearlescent glow. "Are you sure that's what you want, brother?"

For a moment, a shadow of doubt flickered in Hakari's eyes—doubt, or even regret. Then his face hardened once more, and he thrust out his hands precisely as the old man had done that morning. "Judge me, Kanshisha. Show the world the truth you pretend to see."

Hikari reached out, the familiar threads of light extending from her fingers. But the moment they touched Hakari's skin, she recoiled with a gasp of pain. Where there should have been the clear flow of his life force, she saw only churning darkness, like ink dropped into clear water. And within that darkness, something moved—something that should not have been there, something that turned to look at her with eyes made of void.

"Hakari," she panted, cradling her burned fingers as their mother rushed to heal them, "w-what have you done to yourself?"

A smile crept onto Hakari's lips, but it did not reach his eyes. "I've done what had to be done. What you and the elders were too afraid to do. I've learned true power—power that isn't dependent on chance of birth or the capriciousness of old spirits.".

He rolled up his sleeve, revealing marks etched on his arm in that same light-drinking ink she had found on the scroll at the shrine. The symbols twisted in her vision, sending her head reeling with their wickedness. Their father breathed sharply in, reading forbidden runes from the years he had spent guarding against dark magic.

"Desist," Takashi commanded, his tone thick with the weight of years of command. "This is prohibited magic, Hakari. You know the penalty—"

"The penalty?" Hakari laughed cold as broken glass. "The penalty is death, yes. But only if death may come to you." He propped his stamped arm out, and the blackness in the room began flowing against the light of the paper lanterns, extinguishing them individually. "And I'm beyond death now, father. I am immortality it self."

Mizuki moved forward, her hands emitting healing light. "Hakari, please whatever darkness has taken hold of you, we can fight it together. Let me—"

"Always trying to fix everything, mother," Hakari sneered, though a look of pain crossed his features. "But some things cannot be healed over. Sometimes the old must be burned to ashes for the new to grow."

Haruka jumped forward, her own healing energy building, but too late. Shadows enveloped Hakari like a cloak of living darkness, and in the moment before he vanished into them, Hikari glimpsed his eyes—no longer human, but churning with the same darkness that had corrupted his soul.

Remember this night," Hakari voice echoed from everywhere and nowhere. "Remember it when the old ways crumble and true power arises from their wreckage.".

The family stood frozen in the aftermath, the remnants of their meal growing cold, the lantern light seeming weak and insufficient against the darkness that had swallowed their son and brother. Takashi's hands shook as he lowered them from a protective stance that had proved useless. Mizuki collapsed to her knees, her healer's senses overwhelmed by the residual taint of corruption.

"I know it. He's already hubris in the first place." Takashi says looking out side the window.

"What do we do?" Haruka whispered, helping their mother to her feet while trying to flow soothing energy into her frazzled spirit.

Hikari caressed her judgment beads, sensing the heat throb in sync with her racing heart. The weight of her duty had never felt so great. "We do what we have to," she said, though the words were bitter on her tongue. "We report to the elders. And then. then I must complete what the Kanshisha was called to complete."

She looked at her parents—her father's rigid stance betraying his grief, her mother's hands continuing in a healer's position towards where her son had stood—spoke up quietly, "I must... I must judge my own brother."

"Meveni ancestors forgive us," Mizuki whispered, her hand on her husband's arm gripping tightly. "And keep him from what he is now."

Outside, the night pressed against the paper walls of their home, and somewhere in that darkness, Hakari's laughter echoed like a curse. The shadows seemed to dance with newfound purpose, and in the distance, a temple bell began to toll, though no hand had touched its rope.

The demon Hikari had sensed long time ago this morning had arrived, and it wore her brother's face.

Outside, the mist was lifting, the village bathed in soft morning light.

But to Hikari's gifted eyes, the shadows lingered where they shouldn't.

And somewhere, Hakari was smiling.